Guymon Daily Herald

Judge orders Ruggs back to court after missed alcohol test

- By KEN RITTER

LAS VEGAS — A Las Vegas judge ordered former Raiders receiver Henry Ruggs III to appear before her on Monday after learning he missed a required alcohol test while on house arrest following a fatal crash he's accused of causing by driving drunk at speeds up to 156 mph.

Ruggs' lawyers told Justice of the Peace Suzan Baucum that Ruggs "self-tested" negative shortly after missing one of his calls for a breath test last weekend.

Ruggs' attorney, David Chesnoff, blamed the delay on trouble with testing equipment.

A note posted later in the court record shows Ruggs, 22, missed a test at 4:41 p.m. Saturday and that he completed "a client initiated remote breath test" at 6:28 p.m.

The alcohol monitoring agency noted that it "cannot confirm Mr. Rugg's sobriety during this point-in-time," and said Ruggs' attorney provided an updated phone number for text notificati­ons for Ruggs' remote breath test.

Ruggs was not in court Wednesday for a brief hearing during which Baucum declined his lawyers' request for a court order to obtain fire department records about the Nov. 2 crash and fire. She said she'd reconsider if they can't get the records themselves.

Ruggs could face a return to jail. A judge who set his bail at $150,000 warned Ruggs directly that if he didn't comply with release restrictio­ns he would face re-arrest.

Ruggs is under home confinemen­t with electronic monitoring and fourtimes-a-day alcohol checks. He is required to respond to a telephone or text signal by blowing into a device that checks his blood-alcohol level. Records show he owns a $1.1 million home not far from where the crash occurred.

Prosecutor­s have said Ruggs' blood-alcohol level after the crash was 0.16%, twice the legal limit for drivers in Nevada.

Authoritie­s said he and his girlfriend, Kiara Je'nai Kilgo-Washington, were injured when Ruggs' Chevrolet Corvette slammed into the rear of Tina Tintor's Toyota Rav4, rupturing that vehicle's fuel tank.

His lawyers have said in court filings that a witness told them firefighte­rs were slow to extinguish flames They have not identified the witness.

Other witnesses told police they heard screams and tried to rescue Tintor, 23, and her dog but were turned back by heat, flames and smoke.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States